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Friday, 6 July 2012

I had the privilege of giving a paper at the Neutestamentliches
Seminar of the Evangelisch-Theologische Fakultät der Westfälischen
Wilhelms-Universität, Münster on July 4th. In my paper I focussed
on Willi Marxsen (former professor in Münster), N.T. Wright and the continued
quest to make sense of Paul’s view of the future resurrection body. There was a
lively discussion afterwards during which many interesting issues were raised. A
big thank you to Professor Hermut Löhr, Professor Dietrich-Alex Koch (from
Göttingen), Dr Sebastian Fuhrmann
and all the other attendees for the valuable advice, and also those challenging
questions raised by Prof Koch in particular! I had such fun engaging both Willi
Marxsen and N.T. Wright’s very different approaches to the study of Jesus’
resurrection.

Afterwards, some of us had a lovely dinner at a
traditional German restaurant. The discussion was, to say the least mind blowing!
We spoke about people like Martin Hengel, Adolf Schlatter, Rudolf Bultmann,
Karl Barth, Peter Stuhlmacher, Erich Gräßer, Walter Schmidtals, Klaus Berger to
name a few.

A few interesting reflections:

Which British biblical scholars’ works are read in
Germany? There are probably more but the only names I recall were that of C.K.
Barrett, James D.G. Dunn, John Barclay, Francis Watson and Simon Gathercole. I was quite surprised, but very thankful that The Pre-existent Son, Simon Gathercole’s important 2006 monograph is "recommended" reading in Münster!

I asked one of the scholars whether Rudolf Bultmann’s dominance started to fade in Germany, and if so, when? He replied that it did
fade and occurred in the 1970’s. We then spoke about the significance of Ernst Käsemann’s
“bomb shell” in 1962 when he rejected his doktorvater (Bultmann)’s exegesis in public...

But why did Bultmann’s insights fade? One person replied that it was because Bultmann’s existentialism, which he got
from Heidegger, took away the “surprise” of the biblical texts. The scholar went
on to say that he does make reference to Bultmann’s form criticism in his classes,
but only for its “heuristic value”. German scholarship has apparently moved “beyond”
Bultmann’s form criticism. These reflections on Bultmann (by German scholars!)
fascinated me tremendously, in part because a month or two ago, I read on
Facebook of a South African New Testament scholar who still requires his B.A. students
to read Bultmann’s History of the
Synoptic Tradition. With respect, one wonders whether South African scholars
will take note of the fact that some German scholars are recommending Simon Gathercole’s
The Pre-existent Son, a work that attempts
to deconstruct particular trajectories created by German form criticism.

As is fitting for a New
Testament PhD student, I did visit the Institut
für neutestamentliche Textforschung where I was pleasantly surprised to
find Dr Christian Askeland, a Coptic textual-criticism guru who did his PhD at
Cambridge, with Dr Peter William as his supervisor.

1 comment:

Thank you for all the personal e-mails following my paper in Munster! If there is one thing that seems quite clear to me following my experience there, it is that Bultmann and Dibelius' form criticism is out of vogue, even in Germany.

Latest Publications

Frederik S. Mulder, "The Reception of Paul's Understanding of Resurrection and Eschatology in the Epistle to Rheginos: Faithful Paulinism, or Further Development?" in eds. Dan Batovici and Kristin de Troyer, Authoritative Texts and Reception History. Aspects and Approaches (Leuven: Brill, 2016), pp. 199-215 http://www.brill.com/products/book/authoritative-texts-and-reception-history

About Me

I am Frederik Mulder and teaches theology and biblical studies at Winchester University since September 2016. I have a PhD in New Testament and Reception History from Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands (April 2015). My supervisor was Jan van der Watt, and external examiners Ulrich Busse and Hennie Stander. I also hold an MA in Biblical Studies from Durham University with a mini dissertation on the reception of the resurrection in Irenaeus, Tertullian, and Marcion. My supervisor was Francis Watson.

Before moving to the UK in 2007, I acquired an MTh in New Testament from Pretoria University, South Africa, in 2006, where I also completed my BTh in 2004.